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With all the recent Derek Jeter hullabaloo making up for the rather muted covid-induction, I was thinking...
Knowing what we know today and the scope of their careers, who would you pick for your SS if it is day 1 of their career (Real baseball, not SOM)?
Yes I know this is a very NY-centric question and many would say who cares...give me Cal. Although I don't even consider ARod a Yankee even though he was born in NY, but that's just me.
Jeter had a strange script--for all his less than stellar modern objective stats, it is quite amazing he is the Yankee hits leader, the first to win an all star MVP, and seriously--a dinger on #3000 and a walk-off final at bat?
But these two players, both personally and professionally, had a remarkable convergence to 2004 and later divergence IMO that gave a glimpse into the baseball things that are not objectively measured, and how players react. This was made especially clear in their post-season performances and fan acceptance. In the post season, ARod was mostly a shell of his reg season stats (and was not reliable during regular season "crunch moments"), while Jeter was about at his career averages. I'll give ARod some credit though--he did accept moving to 3B...and stuck with the team, unlike some other very good players who got chewed up in NY.
So if you had to choose, whaddya think
Knowing what we know today and the scope of their careers, who would you pick for your SS if it is day 1 of their career (Real baseball, not SOM)?
Yes I know this is a very NY-centric question and many would say who cares...give me Cal. Although I don't even consider ARod a Yankee even though he was born in NY, but that's just me.
Jeter had a strange script--for all his less than stellar modern objective stats, it is quite amazing he is the Yankee hits leader, the first to win an all star MVP, and seriously--a dinger on #3000 and a walk-off final at bat?
But these two players, both personally and professionally, had a remarkable convergence to 2004 and later divergence IMO that gave a glimpse into the baseball things that are not objectively measured, and how players react. This was made especially clear in their post-season performances and fan acceptance. In the post season, ARod was mostly a shell of his reg season stats (and was not reliable during regular season "crunch moments"), while Jeter was about at his career averages. I'll give ARod some credit though--he did accept moving to 3B...and stuck with the team, unlike some other very good players who got chewed up in NY.
So if you had to choose, whaddya think
Last edited by FrankieT on Sun Sep 11, 2022 11:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.